The Huron Expositor, 1922-09-29, Page 6l at p...8
tali. --RIOT el OQNGIES.
a. TPthentliith, 114 0., lea' aare.-
lesred. Good frame house and bank
els yep, lien house and delvingshed.
xl. croute and plenty id gond ,weter.
nfrot dwooadlttoa, 9a keNunn
91/4 miles from Beatortb and 8 Wiles
Clinton, Will be meld cheap and on
tam. APP1y to J. B. H'ENDZE8OON.
VORA FOR SALE., ---NORTH HALF OF
;cot 5. Coneeasion 2. Hallett, containing 80
itareg. 'Mora aro on the premises a good
,frame•haus, and bank barn 84:82 Wath a 18
foot leen to. All fenced and till`s drained
and seeded m grams. Five mil,. from Elea -
forth; 40 rode from en►ool. For further par-
' tremors asoly on Lot S. or phone 18-147. Bea-
, forth. THOMAS F2. LIVINGSTONEtb- 6,
•' No. 2, Seador868-td
OF 1 AI 1 JLJ GLEISH
haat' : pos
tn. feli a AmerI'
scan newsp ratite a sries of
articles whi' hh aim to explain the fam-
ous tricks of the Indian jugglers.
Many of them are shown to be nothing
but skilful jugglery, with prepared
apparatus such ae one may see often
on the vaudeville stage. When these
explanations do not suffice, as, for
instance, in the often -witnessed feat
of a juggler throwing a rope into the
air, up which a small boy climbs
until be disappears in the sky, the
hypothesis of hypnotism is introduced.
In May, 1921, Mr. C. L. Hardcastle
contributed an article to Chamber's
Journal, in which he described some
half dozen amazing tricks performed
I at his bungalow by a first class 14n-
dian juggler, and which he could not
account for, except on the theory
that he had been hypnotized. Anoth-
er witness of the disappearing -boy
trick said that he discovered by accid-
ent that the others of the spectators
who would be prepared to swear that
they saw the boy vanish in thin air
were hypnotized. Instead of fixing
his gaze on the juggler, as everyone
else naturally did, he kept his eyes on
the ground, and only raised them
when the exclamations
of the others
indicated that they were witnessing
a marvel. Then he looked and
saw his companions staring into the
air, but himself saw neither rope nor
boy.
In another
article in the current
issue of Chambers, Mr. Haarbcastle
says that the Indian jugglers are to
be divided into two classes—those
whose work is nothing but clever
sleight-of-hand, and those who either
have the gift of mass hypnotism or
perform some other wonders unknown
to the Caucasian. The same issue
contains a contribution from M. E.
M'Gregor, who has lived in India for
thirty years and tells of some tricks,
which, as he says, take one into the
mysterious ground of the fourth dim-
ension. A short time ago an elderly
Brahmin walked up to the verandah
of a friend's house in Lucknow and
asked if he might perform a few
tricks, as he was collecting funds for
the temple to which he was attached.
Being given permission, he asked what
the sahibs would like him to do.
Should he suspend his animation and
sit where he was for two days?
They said that fifteen minutes
woold be long enough, whereupon
he immediately closed his eyes and
relaxed his muscles. A mirror was
produced and held to his lips. it
remained unclouded. The white
men tried to feel the beating of a
pulse in any artery. There was no
sign of it, nor any other sign of
life. At the end of fifteen minutes
Mr. M'Gregor spoke to him and he
awoke as from a sleep. When told
that what he did was wonderful, he
answered in an apathetic manner:
"I was not here. It is quite easy."
Then he asked for a heavy iron
chain to be produced, and one was
brought that was used as a trace
on an ox -cart. He put it across
his chest, under his arms, and had
FARM FOR SALE.—Boo ACRES, RUNG
Lots 8 and 4, Concession 4, Hallett
Tow -whip, in good state of cultivation. Largs
stone house and two bank bathe with •
underneath: w ladmin and ter
through the table. Will sen with or th-
dnt_jrep end would separate either fame. 1
For pantomime apply to EDWARD PRYER& ,
R. R. No. 2, Seaforth. 2841-tf
WARM LE"
ARM FOR SA—FARM OF TWO 80N-
dred acres adjoining the Town of Sea -
forth, conveniently situated to W churches.
schools- and Collegiate. There la a comfort-
able 150x5 cottage with a cement ketch
barn 100a56 with atone stabling underneath
for 0 horses, 76 bead of cattle and 40 Imp
with 'steel stnnehiom and water before all '
stock; litter carrier and feed carrier and
two Gamont silos ; driving shed and plat-
form scales. Watered wellby a rook n eand
windmill. The farm Is drained and In I
a high state of cultivotion. The crop
in the ground—chilies clay l.sn. [mmadl- i
m
to possmolon. Apply to M. BEATON. f.
8 2. Seaforth. Oat. 2787-tf
rrHE EXECUTORS OF 'CITE LATE ARCM-
.; bald McGregor offer for sal. Lot 16,
6th Concession, M,Elllop. 100 Hetes of tint
ch..* farm lands. The land is in a lint .
eines stone of cultivation d there are
lted the premise, good frame dwel- i
ing house. with kitchen attached: frame I
barn 76n24 with atone foundation, .tabling
underneath and cement floors and water
throughout. driving house, pig pen and hem
house. Also about ten acres of good hard
wood bush. The property lo well fenced and
well drained and convenient to good markets, '
churches and ,chools.For further particulars
apply to MISS LILLY J. M.GREOOR, on the
premises, or to 8. S. HAYS, Solicitor, Sea-
forttb, Ont -..tf
FOR SALE.—FOR SALE LOT 8s.
Coareas ion 6, McKillop, eo taming 1N
eerie. all cleared except 8 sores of hardwood
bush. There are on the premises a bank
barn with stone and cement foundation, 46z82,
with cement floors ; driving shed. 14286:
frame ,table, 28,22, large gravel house. 7
rooms and kitchen. cement floors to cellar.
Hard and soft water in kitchen : nee acres
of orchard. The farm le allre fenced
and tile drained. Well at barn + mod alae
wail at the bush. This is a good farm—one
of the best in McKillop. It is ,itnated 6
mil.. from the Town of Setifortb and one
mile from school and church. Rural mail
d phone. Will be sold en reasonable term.. '
For further particulars apply on the prem -
is® or address R. R. No. 1, Seaforth.
ROBERT A. HOGG. 2801-tf
4BEAM WANTED CREAM
Ship by Express; send by our
cream drawers, or deliver your cream
to the Seaforth Creamery.
We are determined to give our
Patrons better service than ever.
Watch onr prices, consistent with
our accurate weights and testa, and
consider the many advantages of hav-
ing a thriving dairy industry in your
district.
Do not ship your Cream away to
other Creameries ; we will gnaraO,tee
you as good prices here and our very
best services.
Write, or call in our cream drawers
and we will send you cream cans.
When in town, visit our Creamery,
which we want also to be your
Creamery. We are proud of our
plant.
THE SEAFORTH CREAMERY CO.
C A. Barber, Manager.
288441
PRESTON PORTABLE
GARAGE AND COTTAGES
in several designs, also Steel
Truss Barns and Implement
Sheds, all sizes. For further
particulars write
The Metal Shingle 8c Siding Co.
Preston.
or
WILLIAM T. GRIEVE.
Walton. Phone 14-234.
Also agent for Chicago Auto
Oil Windmills.
(fTI-E McKILLOP MUTUAL
WIRE INSURANCE CO'Y.
HEAD OFFICE—SEAFORTH, ONT.
OFFICERS:
J. Connolly, Goderich - - President
Jas. Evans, Beechwood vice-president
T. E. Hays, Seaforth - Secy-Trsas
AGENTS:
Alex. Leitch, R. 11, No. 1, Clinton; Ed.
Hir,ehley, Seafort'h; John Murray,
Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seafortk;
J. W. Yo, Goderich; R. G. Jar -
ninth, Brodhagen.
DIRECTORS:
William Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John
Bennewies, Brodhagen• James Evates,
tock; Geo. McCartney, 'No. 8, Seaforth
Beechwood• M. McNeren, Clinton; Jas.
Connolly, 1?oderleh• D. F. McGregor,
B. R. No. 8, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve,
No. 4, Walton; Robert Ferree, Her.
DON'T
THiS!
Use
LEONARD -
EAR OIL -
IT DOES RELIEVE DEAFNESS
and HEAD NOISES. Simply rub
it in back of the ears and insert
in nostrils.
MADE IN CANADA
L. H. Bedlington & Co.
Sales Agents Torente
For sale in Seaforth by E.
Umbach, and all good druggists
Athletic Girls
After a hard game it is not
only the delicate fragrance
of Baby's Own Soap which
pleases, but also the wonder-
ful restfulness imparted by
its refreshing lather.
BABY'S OWN
SOAP
3;1•,N'r Zest
)
vn�,ff
OAi (/OIi
,fast
j'sBaby
ALSSRT SOAPS LIMITED MONTREAL
Men! - - Girlal
DON'T BE "LONESOME"
We put you in correspondence
with FRENCH GIRLS, HAWA-
IAN, GERMAN, AMERICAN,
CANADIAN, etc., of both sex-
es, etc., who are refined, charm-
ing and wish to correspond for
amusement or marriage, if spit-
ed. JOIN OUR CORRESPOND-
ENCE CLUB, $1 per year; 4
months' trial, 50c, including uU
privileges. PHOTOS FREE.
Join, at once or write for fall
information.
MRS. FLORENCE BELLAIRE,
200 Montagne St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
1 t rued biibL_.
eitpended tris tttiu a leaf rand P s
a clean break just .,over his cheat.
Hethen asked for eometbing that
no , human being could digest and
with apparently ust discomfort, swal-
lowed a lot of broken glass, two pack-
ets of darning needles and some mer-
cury.
He asked that a walldng cane
be produced. It was brought, and
a jeweled ring, that the white, men
could recognize, was slipped on it,
and dangled in the middle. Mr.
M'Gregor held the cane firmly on
each aide, a few inches away from
the ring. The priest then stretched
out his finger and pulled the ring off
through the cane, not a quick jerk,
but just a casual pail The dumb-
founded spectatorsasked him to re-
peat the trick, but he said: "Why
repeat what you have seen? Let one
of your servant girls give me one
of her metal anklets- one without a
join and very heavy." One was pro-
duced, and this the juggler pushed up
his arm until it stuck and could go
no farther. Then, as if he were
measuring a span, he put his thumb
on one aide of it and his little finger
on the other, and lightly pulled it
through his arm and handed it back.
Of course, the appropriate ate comment
is that hdidn't
pull it through his
arm, but if he didn't it is abvious
that Mr. M'Gregor and the other
white spectators were hypnotized.
The writer tells further of having
many times witnessed the walking -
on -fire trick, which no one can ex-
plain. Not only do the fakirs walk
on blazing charcoal, but they can
make white men do it without feel-
ing any pain. It is plain that, while
the jugglers might have some secret
method of hardening their feet, the
white spectators would not, and that
they either walked on fire or that
a hundred of them at -one time could
he hypnotized into the notion that
they wore witnessing the feat, while
another half dozen were hypnotized
into the belief that they were doing
it. Mr. McGregor says that at Hard -
wan he saw a man hanging head
downward from the branch of a tree,
and was told that he lived always in
that position. Certainly, he was al-
ways there at any hour of the day or
night that Mr. McGregor passed, and
he did this several times in the three
days his camp was in the neighbor-
hood. The very fact that it is impos-
sible to lure these adepts of the occult
to visit Europe or America to demon-
strate their powers, is in itself an in-
dication that they have discovered
some secret which makes them indif-
ferent to what the rest of us accept
as the great truths and objects of
life.
.,vita
chain snapped like a 'bit of cottopa-,
Peter
(Continued from page 7)
windows could be seen half a mile
up the raging torrent, the curve of
the unfinished embankment flanking
one side of the new boulevard which
McGowan was building under a con-
tract with the village.
Hardly had he slipped off his boots
and tarpaulins when MacFarlane, in
mackintosh and long rubber boots,
splashed in:
"Breen," said his Chief, loosening
the top button of his storm coat and
threshing the water from his cap:
Jack was on his feet in an instant.
"Yes, sir."
"I wish you would take a look at
the boulevard spillway. I know Mc-
Gowan's work and how he skins it
sometimes, and I'm getting worried.
Coggins says the water is backing up,
and that the slopes are giving way.
You can see yourself what a lot of
water is coming down—" here they
both gazed through the open win-
dow. "1 never saw that stream, look
like that since I've been here; there
must be a frightful pressure now on
McGowan's retaining walls. We should
have a close shave if anything gave
way above us. Our own culvert's
working all, right, but it's taxed now
to its utmost."
Jack unhooked his water proof
from a nail behind the door—he had
began putting on his rubber boots a-
gain before MacFarlane finished
speaking.
"Ile will have to pay the bills, sir,
if anything gives way—" Jack re-
plied in a determined voice. "Garry
told me only last week that McGow-
an had to take care of his own water;
that was part of his contract. It
comes under Garry's supervision, you
know." -
"Yes, I know, and that may all be
so, Breen," he replied with a flicker-
ing smile, "but it won't do us any
good,—or the road either. They
want to run cars next month."
The door again swung wide, and a
man drenched to the skin, the water
glistening on his bushy gray beard
stepped in.
"I heard you were here, sir, and
had to see you. There's only four
feet lee -way in our culvert, sir, and
the scour's eating into the underpin-
ning; I am just up from there. We
are trying bags of cement, but it
doesn't do me .. good."
MacFarlane ht up his hat and
the two hurr own stream to the
"fill," while Jack, buttoning his oil-
skin jacket over his cheat, and crowd-
ing his slouch hat close to his eye-
brows and ears strode out into the
downpour, his steps bent in the op-
posite direction.
The sight that met his eyes was
even more alarming. The once quiet
little stream, with its stretch of
meadowland reaching to the foot of
the steep hills, was now a swirl of
angry reddish water careering to-
ward the big culvert under the "fill."
There it struck the two flanking walls
of solid masonry, doubled in volume
and thus baffled, shot straight into
and under the culvert and so on over
the broad fields below.
Up the stream toward the boule-
vard do the other side of its sky line,
groups of men were already engaged
carrying shovels, or lugging pieces
of timber as they hurried along its
IftuCiTt
normal tio4
do its woregj�
S
J. C6oAeY^-Ik Co.. Toledo, Oblo`
t;
tilti �"
uualo�t1. 8}��sleansln�
411„ a and 4Di wi IVg ut'b0
circulars free,
edge onlyto disappear for an in-
stant and reappear again empty-
handed. Shouts could be heard, as
if some one were giving orders.
Against the Storm -swept sky, Mc-
Gowan's short, squat figure was vis-
ible, his hands waving wildly to other
gangs of men who were running at
full speed toward where he stood.
Soon a knife-edge of water gUaten-
ed along the crest of the earth em-
bankment supporting the roadway of
the boulevard, scattered into a dozen
sluiceways, gashing the sides of the
slopes, and then, before Jack could
realize his own danger, the whol
mass collapsed only to be swallewe
up in a mighty torrent which leape
straight at him.
Jack wheeled suddenly, shouted t
a num behind him to run for his life
and raced on dawn stream tower
the "fill" a mile below where MacFa
lane and'
his men, uncoasclous of the
danger, were strengthening the cul
vert and iia approaches.
On swept the flood, tearing up tree
cabins, shanties, fences; swirling
long the tortuo,, bed only to lea
and swirl
again, �! solid front brist
ing with the debns it had wrench,
loose in its mad onslaught, Jack i
his line of flight keeping abreast o
its mighty thrust, shouting as he
ran, pressing int. service every man
who could help in the rescue.
But MacFarlan,' had already been
forewarned. Tho engineer of the
morning express, who had crossed
close to the boulevard at the moment
the break occurred, had leaned far
out of his cab as the train thundered
by at right angles to the "fill," and
with cupped hands to his mouth, had
hurled this yell into the ravine:
"Water! Look out! Everything
busted up above: Water! Water!
Run, for God's sake!"
The men stood irresolute, but Mac-
Farlane sprang to instant action.
Grabbing the man next him,—an Ital-
ian who understood no English—he
dragged him al ig, shouting to the
others, the crowd swarming up,
throwing away their shovels in their
flight until the tvhule posse reached a
point of safety near the mouth of
the tunnel.
There he turned and braced him-
self for the shock. He realized fully
what had happened: McGowan's ill -
constructed culvert had sagged and
choked; a huge basin of water had
formed behind it; the retaining walls
had been undermined and the whole
mass was sweeping down upon him.
Would there be enough of it to over-
flow the crest 'line of his own "fill"
or not? If it could stand the first
on -thrust there was one chance in a
hundred of its safety, provided the
wing -walls and the foundations of the
culvert held up its arch, thus afford-
ing gradual relief until the flood
should have spent its force.
It was but a question of minutes.
He could already see the trees sway
as the mad flood struck them, the
smaller ones reboundng, the large
ones toppling over. Then came a
dull roar like that of a train through
a covered bridge, and then a great
wall of yellow suds, boiling, curling,
its surface covered with sticks, planks,
shingles, floating barrels, parts of
buildings, dashed itself against the
smoothed earth elopes of his own
"fill," surged a third of its height,
recoiled on itself, swirled furiously
again, and then inch by inch rose to-
ward the top. Should it plunge over
the crest, the "fill" would melt a-
way as a rising tide melts a sand
fort, the work of months be destroy-
ed, and his financial ruin be a cer-
tainty.
But the man who had crawled out
on the shore end of the great canti-
lever bridge over the Ohio, and who
hAfj with his own_ bands practically
set the last rebellions steel girder one
hundred feet above the water level,
had still some resources left. Grab-
bing a shovel from a railroad employe
he called to his men and began dig-
ging a trench on the tunnel end of
the 'fill" to form a temporary spill-
way should the top of the flood reach
the crest of the road bed.
Fifty or more men sprang to his
assistance with pick and shovel where -
ever one could stand and dig. The
rise was slower, showing that the
volume had lessened; the soakage,
too, was helping, but the water still
gained. The bottom of the trench,
cut transversely across the road bed
of the "fill," out of which the dirt
was still flying from scores of willing
shovels, had reached the height of
the fllood line. It was wide enough
and deep enough to take care of the
slowly rising overflow and would re-
lieve the pressure on the whole struc-
ture ; but the danger was not there.
What was to be feared was the scour
on the down-stream—far sire—slope
of the "fill." This also, was of loose
earth: too great a gulch might mean
total collapse.
Choose Best 'Varieties For Liv
Stock Fodder.
Should Ripen at Least a Few Ears•.+
The Grain Is eloltrtet4lallw-.L'roZtell
Corn Preferred to tlltnlatUleee
Harvesting boot Crops.
(Contributed by Ontario Department of
Agriculture, Toronto,)
The highest grade of corn silage is
Made fr•>tm those varletlee of 00i'4
that produce a large proportion oh
grain in the total weight of crop.
Large growing southern varieties of
dent corn that give an Immense
green weight of fodder per acre will
an a rule produce a very poor silage
under Ontario conditions. Many
dairymen prefer flint varieties and,
d the smaller stalk varieties of early
d maturing dents for silage purpoeea.
From such a rich sweet silage can
O be made. The weight per sore may
not be nearly as great as with the'
late maturing large growing dente,!
theare compared
• but when alleges ar
gD
it .
on the digestible dry matter basis
the smaller growing earlier maturing
1,r dents and flints have the advantage.
$- r Use Corn Ripening Some Ears. 1
P
experience of the set has
as
I- p p
d shown that only such varieties as
n . will ripen at least a few ears should'
be used. In early years of silo ex-
perience in Ontario the practice was
to grow big corn. Little attention
was paid to the grain yield; , much
poor silage resulted from the twelve
to fourteen -foot stalks that went in-
to the silo without the very neces-
sary two pound well glazed ear. Hard
experience has demonstrated that
there is more milk, beef or butterfat
1n a cubic foot of silage made from
corn that would husk out one hun-
dred bushels per acre, than from a
1 corn crop that contents of big juicy
talka only.
Tho Beet Varieties.
i Golden Glow, Essex Dent, Wlecon-
sin 7, Bally, North Western Dent,
Compton's Early, Longfellow, Sal-
zer'a North Dakota and King Philip
are varieties well suited to Ontario
conditions. These varieties will ripen
in the southwestern counties of On-
tario, and they will generally reach
the roasting ear state over the
greater part of the dairy section of
the Province. The greatest quantity
of digestible dry matter is to be ob-
• tanned from a corn crop when it has
reached the condition to cut for husk-
ing, ripe enough to complete matur-
ity in the shock. Another advantage
In growing the earlier maturing va-
rieties is thet such can be ensiled
early in September and the land pro-
pared for autumn wheat, an import-
' ant factor now that the European
Corn Borer has become a menace to
corn growing.
Frozen Corn Preferred to Immature
The freezing of corn after it has
reached the denting or early glaze
1 stage does not materially injure in
so tar as silage making goes. It te
always advisable to run the risk of
frost, rather than ensile the corn in
an immature state.—L. Stevenson,
' Sea Dept. of Agriculture, Toronto.
Harvesting Root Crops.
Roots crop should be taken up be-
fore the weather becomes too wet
and disagreeable in the fall if in any,
quantity. It is slow work at any,
time, and becomes muck more so
under cold damp conditlodie Lift the
roots with a digging fork and twist
off the tope, putting them in piles
and covering with the tops. If a
large area le to be lifted, and one
is expert with a sharp hoe, he can
i very quickly remove the tope, but
they will not keep quite as well. The
roots should be ploughed out, throw-
ing them as much as possible on the
top. Bins with slatted Sides and bot-
tom should be used for storage where
Possible, as this gives the recite a
chance to sweat. If the storage room
temperature is above 40 deg. b'., Dover.
them with sand. Carrots should not
be deeper than two feet in a bin
others may be four feet. Where cellar
storage is not available use pits.
These should be three feet wide, two
or three feet high and of any length.
Run the pits north and south where
possible and have them on well -drain-
ed ground. Put a layer of straw on
the ground and cover first with straw
six inches deep, then six inches of
earth, and as the frost gets harder
cover with fresh strawy manure.
Have ve
ntllators every 15 or 20 feet;
as all roots sweat in storage. Thetis
may be filled with straw during Bold
periods.
All roots should be as free from
dirt as possible when put in storage.
It 1s often advisable to leave a few
days in small piles so that at the
second lifting any adhering will be
moved.—A. H. MacLennan, O. A. Col-
lege, Guelph.
Freemartin Heifers.
Twin calves—both of the same sea
—will breed with just as much tier-
tatnty as though they were born
singly. When twine are born male
and female the female It known as
a freemartin and is usually sterile
There have been eases where free -
(Continued next week.) martins have conceived, but they are
rare. Probably not over one out of
100 will breed. •It is Just as unusual
for the bull of male and female twins
not to breed.
A Gdod Whitewash.
Slake one-half bushel of fresh lime
with boiling water, covering the re-
ceptacle to keep in the steam. Strain
the liquid through a fine sieve, and
add seven pounds of fine salt, pre,
viously dlesolved In warm water;
three pounds of ground rice, boiled
to a thin paste and stirred in; one
pound of white glue,"soaked first is
cold water until swollen, then care-
fully melted over lire.
To this mixture" add five gallons
of hot water and -let it stand covered
for a few days before using.
In Tibet, it is not unusual for a
woman' to marry three or four hus-
bands.
l
it 1
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reetdree Q
duct
Uoa�eu
Ingo
by
}Nf,1h R'`..u'l 1'��,' ,ad i-0.+.-'�'k�•l' -- ing F1Y't':.�Q'•,
t FI it i ,�
k m, ` r ;tl
V
Y ft
MD
Palle Up $1001000 '•tnd' $5000,I00
Hee; X25 0.
A FARM RUN ON A RUMNESS B, $S
, tRA °thee earning fromof , vN ' ,:; u'�„g .
.be ,alh ted' to eeck , meltsry�. N '1
ttt kbeae earning* eoildgo to Ur �+,` ,
TRtduieed 4mmtI► ngq- a
account with The MolsOis Bole.111each one sfaldtious to make kis product pairDypl
mail accepte4 •'- . v-'-
BRANCHES IN MB DISTWICPI . 4; r-
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INDEPENDENCE
THE DOMINION
affords an unequalled
or large amounts
to $5,000 a year
age desired,
ments.
Annuities
lives of two
After
Employers
Boards for their
SECURITY—THE
Descriptive
Postmaster
Superintendent
When writing,
;,.?tri t
•
GOVERNMENT ANNUITIES SYSTEM
opportunity for the investment of small
for the purchase of an annuity of from $50
for life, to begin immediately or at any future
and to be paid in monthly or quarterly instal-
may be purchased on a single life, or on the
persons jointly.
contract issues, no restriction as to residence.
may purchase for their employees—School
teachers—Congregations for their Ministers.
Cannot be seized or levied upon.
No medical examination required.
from Dominion Income Tax.
DOMINION OF CANADA
booklet may be obtained by applying to the
or by writing, postage free, to S. T Bastedo,
Dominion Government Annuities Ottawa.
�.
kindly state sex, and age or ages last birthday.
1
Doubleaction-Goes farther—Airy—It—and f
you'll be delighted with the results,.
EGG -OH
' Mint Plailinler
—
ORDER FROM YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD GROC�I
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• TORO TO
The Only Hotel of its Kind in Canada
Centrally situated, close to shops and theatres.
Fireproof. Home comfort and hotel conven-
`tt fence. Finest cuisine. Cosy tea room open
1` ,,k1 till midnight. Single room, with bath, $2.60 ;
rI t double room, with bath, $4.00_ Breakfast,
1 .l 50c. to 76x. Luncheon, 86x. Dinner, $1.00.
"••pr,, iiA Flee taxi service from trains and boat., Woe
,•octad
Black and Waste Taxis only. Write far bookie!
240 JARVIS STREET - - TORONTO, ONT.
r The Question. of Price
r
Price seems the main considerationJbttt it is weU to
remember that some ,lathes are dear at any price, how-
r ever low.
"Clothes of Quality" are a positive proof Vast Cornet
Styles, Fine Fabrics and First-class Tailoring can b. ob-
r tained at reasonable prices.
Before you buy your new Suit, give us a eaU and took
over our Samples and Styles. We can gave you dollar* alma '
r give you real value.
Suits $20 Up '
fit r
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Wardrobe" Main St., Seaforth
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